What Is the Eucharist? A Dogmatic OutlineBruce D. Marshall
The Rosary Christ in the Eucharist The Institution of the Mass Call No Man "Father"? Celibacy and the Priesthood Grace: What It Is and What It Does Assurance of Salvation? Purgatory Birth Control Adam, Eve, and Evolution Is Catholicism Pagan?
The consecrated bread or wafer of the Eucharist. Host To serve as host to or at "the garden party he had hosted last spring" (Saturday Review). Host To provide software that offers data or services, hardware, or both over a computer network. Host One which receives or entertains a guest...
The doctrine of the Real Presence asserts that in the Eucharist, Jesus is literally present under the appearances of bread and wine.
It would be a bit of a reinterpretation to interpret it to mean the body of Christ in general, because there is a truth to be captured there in reference to the visible institution. If you know Jesus Christ wants you to become a member of the visible institution of the Catholic Church,...
Now, the penitential rite reminds us (a) we are sinners and (b) we need to be cleansed of our sins to participate in the Eucharist. The penitential rite isnota sacramental rite. (That’s why the “absolution”—“May Almighty God have mercy on us…”—is imprecatory, not declaratory...
Benediction is a blessing or expression of good wishes, often used at the end of a religious service, while an invocation is a call for support or inspiration, typically at the beginning.
A much more popular theory in the early church (including Jerome and Augustine) was that it meant something like “supersubstantial” — or spiritual — and referred to the bread of the Eucharist. This is still one of the preferred interpretations in the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches....
It is called the Last Supper because it was the final (last) time they all gathered around a table together to a meal (supper) of wine and bread—which became the institution of theEucharist, remembering how Jesus gave his body (symbolized as bread) and blood (wine) in a sacrifice for...
Rosemary Morris (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1997); Une saint horreur; ou le voyage en eucharistie, XVIe–XVIII siècles (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1996). Google Scholar Antoinette Molinié, ‘D’un village de La Mancha à un glacier des Andes. Deux célébrations “sauvages” ...